romance

noun
/rə(ʊ)ˈman(t)s/UK/roʊˈmæn(t)s/US/roˈmæns/

Etymology

From Middle English romauns, roumance, borrowed from Anglo-Norman and Old French romanz, romans (the vernacular language of France, as opposed to Latin), from Medieval Latin rōmānicē, Vulgar Latin rōmānicē (“in the Roman language”, adverb), from Latin rōmānicus (“roman”, adjective) from rōmānus (“a Roman”). Doublet of Romansch.

  1. derived from rōmānicus
  2. derived from rōmānicē
  3. derived from rōmānicē
  4. derived from romanz
  5. inherited from romauns

Definitions

  1. An intimate relationship between two people

    An intimate relationship between two people; a love affair.

    • Everybody's working for the weekend Everybody wants a new romance.
  2. A strong obsession or attachment for something or someone.

  3. Idealized love which is pure or beautiful.

  4. + 14 more definitions
    1. A story, novel, film, etc., centred around an idealized love relationship.

    2. A story relating to chivalry

      A story relating to chivalry; a story involving knights, heroes, adventures, quests, etc.

      • `Will you undertake the task? We give you complete freedom, and as a reward you will, we believe, have the credit of presenting to the world the most wonderful history, as distinguished from romance, that its records can show.'
    3. A tale of high adventure.

      • Could one have known the past histories of some of the oddly-selected couples who shared everything in common, many a romance might have been written during what, to all outward appearances, was a dull and prosaic time to most lookers-on!
    4. A mysterious, exciting, or fascinating quality.

      • the romance of cruising down the Nile.
    5. A literary or filmic genre about idealized love.

    6. An embellished account of something

      An embellished account of something; an idealized lie.

    7. An adventure, or series of extraordinary events, resembling those narrated in romances.

      • His life was a romance.
    8. A dreamy, imaginative habit of mind

      A dreamy, imaginative habit of mind; a disposition to ignore what is real.

      • She was so full of romance she would forget what she was supposed to be doing.
    9. A sentimental piece of music

      A sentimental piece of music; a romanza.

    10. To woo

      To woo; to court.

      • In the ghetto, the gentle Barber romances a defiant washerwoman, Hannah, who is played by Chaplin's wife at the time, Paulette Goddard.
    11. To write or tell romantic stories, poetry, letters, etc.

    12. To talk extravagantly and imaginatively

      To talk extravagantly and imaginatively; to build castles in the air.

    13. The group of languages and cultures which are derived from Vulgar Latin.

    14. Of or dealing with languages or cultures derived from Roman influence and Latin

      Of or dealing with languages or cultures derived from Roman influence and Latin: French, Italian, Portuguese, Spanish, Galician, Romanian, Catalan, Occitan, etc.

      • In this paper we will concentrate on the problem posed by Iberian Romance languages (i.e. Catalan, Portuguese, and Spanish), …

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

A definitional loop anchored at romance. Each word in the ring is defined by the next; follow the chain far enough and it folds back on itself. Scroll to it and watch.

01romance02obsession03preoccupation04preoccupies05preoccupy06attention07romantic

A definitional loop anchored at romance. Each word in the ring appears in the definition of the next; follow the chain far enough and it folds back on itself.

7 hops · closes at romance

curated · pre-corpus. live cycle detection across the full graph is the next major milestone.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA